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Archive for the 'Garden of the Gods' Tag

IT’S A GREAT TIME TO BE A BIKING FAN

August 21st, 2011, 9:00 am by

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The big project for the city's trail staff in 2011 is completing the 3.5-mile Midland Trail from America the Beautiful Park to Manitou Springs. A $2 million grant from Great Outdoors Colorado paid for the project, due to be completed in October.

Perhaps the most exciting three-day sports weekend in Colorado Springs history culminates Monday when 135 or so pro bike riders launch themselves from Garden of the Gods and race downtown at upwards of 50 mph.

It’s the prologue of the USA Pro Cycling Challenge, and it follows the Pikes Peak Ascent and Marathon over the weekend.

I’m totally psyched!

And it reminds me how lucky I am to live in a community that embraces cycling and encourages it with a network of neighborhood trails.

Side Streets columnist Bill Vogrin prepares to bomb down a ski run at Breckenridge.

The trail system isn’t perfect. I’ve done my share of bushwacking when a trail abruptly ended. And I’ve gotten lost a few times trying to find connections.

But I’ve also lived in cities where I wouldn’t dare commute 10 miles on a bike, as I do from my Rockrimmon home to downtown.

Check out a video I made of my commute.

Hang on as you climb onto the handlebars of my old Stumpjumper and rocket along with me at 60 mph — thanks to the magic of time-lapse editing — down the Pikes Peak Greenway along Monument Creek, over to the Shooks Run Trail and finally to The Gazette.

Or take a longer, full-length 40-minute trip with notes inserted to point out landmarks and street-crossnigs.

It was a blast making the video. And I’d love to see videos of your commutes.

Signs like these help trail riders find their way through the city's network.

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Some signs are in better shape than others.

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Here's another map in the Patty Jewitt Neighborhood

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It got me wondering about the status of area trails, especially with the severe budget cuts experienced by the parks agency.

Actually, a lot is going on.

Kurt Schroeder, manager of the city’s parks, trails and open space, said his staff remains committed to developing trails and piecing together missing links that sometimes frustrate folks on two wheels.

“It’s a slow process,” Schroeder said. “We have little money for rebuilding old trails. But we can still get money for new trails.”

In fact, the city expects to finish in October most of the 3.5-mile Midland Trail from America the Beautiful Park to Manitou Springs, thanks to a $2 million lottery grant from Great Outdoors Colorado, or GOCO.

Trail is being built along Sand Creek out east as well as from North Nevada Avenue to Dublin Boulevard near Cottonwood Creek, said Sarah Bryarly, the city’s trail guru.

Her wish list includes expanding the Rock Island Trail, punching Shooks Run Trail south to Fountain Creek and expanding Cottonwood Creek Trail from Vincent Drive.

It all sounds great to me. I can’t wait to ride them.

And I can’t wait to see your photos and videos!

Here’s some of the sights you’ll see on my video:

On my commute, I enjoy crossing the bridges over Monument Creek and its tributaries.

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Going under bridges can be spooky like this crossing under Pikes Peak Avenue.

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Stay alert. You never know when you might encounter wildlife . . . even the prehistoric kind.

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The city has placed mile markers along the Pikes Peak Greenway to help you keep track or your progress.

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This is one of my favorite spots popping up from under the Garden of the Gods Road bridge and seeing the sunflowers along the edge of Pikeview Reservior and Pikes Peak in the background.

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I like this overpass that carries you over Cache La Poudre Street and into Shooks Run Park.

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Down along Monument Creek near Roswell neighborhood.

Colorado Springs Parks, Recreation and Cultural Services Department has a trails page with tons of useful information.

Check out this

trails page: http://www.springsgov.com/Page.aspx?NavID=1881
pikes peak greenway trail: http://www.springsgov.com/units/parksrec/maps/pdfmaps/24x36ppgy.pdf
midland trail map: http://www.springsgov.com/Page.aspx?NavID=2289

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PLAYING THROUGH! I’M GONNA BURY THIS PUTT!

July 13th, 2011, 1:16 pm by

Andrea Brown, former Gazette columnist

My former colleague, Andrea Brown, wrote a piece in 2007 about how her family kept the ashes of her mother-in-law, Grandma Brown, in a cardboard urn in a linen closet.

It was a funny piece. Read it here. Of course, Andrea often made me laugh. Even when she didn’t mean to.

Anyway, I thought of Andrea and Grandma Brown when I learned what other folks do with the cremated remains of their relatives.

Turns out, lots of folks spread ashes around Colorado Springs parks, trails and even golf courses.

Playing through!

In fact, back in 1995, maintenance crews at Patty Jewett Golf Course, found a strange-looking substance spread on the 17th green.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Patty Jewett Golf Course boasts spectacular views.

Dal Lockwood, manager of the city’s golf enterprise, tells the story:

“There was a fair amount of stuff spread all over the greens. One of our old guys, an old sage, tasted it. He said it tasted salty. We had it tested. It was cremated remains.”

Wonder if it tasted like chicken?

Anyway, it’s a pretty common practice, as I learned. City parks, trails and golf courses get used for a lot of things besides the obvious.

Of course, weddings are a common activity especially during spring and summer. Some places must be reserved for a fee. Learn more here.

Garden of the Gods Park

 Topping the list are the Garden of the Gods and Grandview Overlook in Palmer Park, says Kurt Schroeder, parks, trails and open space manager for the city parks department.

Both parks offer inspiring views and spectacular backdrops for ceremonies and photos.

Some prefer getting hitched atop Pikes Peak with the panorama of the city as their backdrop.

Others like the American Mothers Chapel at Rock Ledge Ranch or the

Heritage Garden in Monument Valley Park.

 The gazebo and pond at Nancy Lewis Park is a favorite spot for tying the knot. The splashing waters of Helen Hunt Falls in Cheyenne Cañon attract some for their nuptials while others exchange vows at the Red Rock Canyon Open Space pavilion.

And there have been plenty of wedding receptions of Patty Jewett.

But I was surprised how often the same venues are used to spread cremated remains.

“The Garden of the Gods is probably the place the most ashes are scattered,” said Paul Butcher, retired parks department director. “We’ve always had hearsay stories that people scatter ashes in Garden of the Gods, Palmer Park and from the top of Pikes Peak. It happens. We never encouraged it. But I’m 100 percent sure people have done it.”

In fact, Native American groups tried unsuccessfully to stop construction of the visitors center in 1994 by claiming the garden was a sacred burial ground of the Kiowa, Cheyenne and Arapaho tribes.

Here’s a link to a video about Patty Jewett Golf Course.

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NEW REALITY SHOW . . . HOUSEWIVES OF KISSING CAMELS

June 12th, 2011, 11:00 am by

Pikes Peak rises behind the Kissing Camels rock formation, on the right, in this file photo by Mark Reis of The Gazette

Kissing Camels Estates is one of the most affluent and prestigious neighborhoods in Colorado Springs.

It is a gated community overlooking Garden of the Gods and Pikes Peak.

It represents old money, wealth and power – a place where 80 people were invited to join if they passed a series of interviews with founders Al and Margaret Hill and their associates.

The lucky elite charter members — legend says the list included Walt Disney and John Wayne — were granted access to the regions most exclusive golf, tennis and social club.

Behind its guardhouse off Mesa Road are 550 custom homes and townhomes along a sprawling, wooded 27-hole golf course. It has a 108-room club complex and recreation center with 13 tennis courts, pools and a fleet of golf carts.

But all is not as placid as it appears in the community the Hill opened in 1951 .

Below is a photo of construction of the Garden of the Gods Club in May 1950, taken from the club’s Web site, showing developer Al Hill, third from left, overseeing work on his project. He conceived it as a luxury summertime-only tennis and social club with guest rooms.

Developer Al Hill, third from left, is seen in this May 1950 photograph on the mesa where he built the Garden of the Gods Club and the Kissing Camels Estates and golf course.

The Kissing Camels Estates housing development began at the same time but, according to the Web site, it was years before Hill was convinced to include a golf course. The original 18-hole course opened in 1961, 10 years after the club.

Here’s how it looks today.

I saw this photo on the Garden of the Gods Club Blog. It shows the Kissing Camels Golf Course in 1969.

Margaret Hunt Hill in a 1994 file photo

According to its history, Al and Margaret Hill bought the 1,600-acre mesa in 1949 and the club held its grand opening in June 1951.

It soon rivaled The Broadmoor as a retreat for the rich and famous.

This 2007 obituary for Margaret Hunt Hill gives more detail of the couple and their vision for Kissing Camels. Al Hill died of complications from hip surgery in 1988, four months shy of the couple’s 50th wedding anniversary.

I wrote about Kissing Camels and problems with its homeowners associations back in 2007. This is a link.

I also wrote a blog in 2007. It was one of my first. See it here.

Read all about the lawsuit filed by the Kissing Camels Property Owners Association against the 49 members of the Kissing Camels Townhomes.

You can read Judge Timothy Schutz’s complete ruling here.

Here’s a link to the covenants and governing documents for all the Kissing Camels neighborhoods.

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NATIONAL HISTORIC DISTRICT TO MOST IS JUST HOME TO SOME

May 22nd, 2011, 11:04 am by

Chances are, you have heard about the mysterious Keithley Log Cabin National Historic District in Manitou Springs but you’ve never seen it much less toured its cabins, which date to 1919.  

Well now is your chance to see it.  

It’s a living history museum. Hand-built log cabins in a hilly valley and on a ridge with spectacular views of the Garden of the Gods.  

  

Everard Keithley in a photocopy of a 1937 newspaper clipping.

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The district was created in 1983 because folks deemed valuable the collection of cabins built by legendary Pike National Forest superintendent Everard Keithley.  

After working summer jobs for the Forest Service, Keithley came to Colorado and took a fulltime appointment in Durango in January 1912.   

He moved to the Pike in 1913 to oversee planting trees among other duties.  

In 1919, he paid $1,700 for 10 acres on the eastern edge of Manitou Springs and started building a cabin.  

Eventually he would own 16 acres and by 1956 there were seven cabins on the property.  

 

Nancy Galles Bower owns 8.6 acres and six cabins that make up the bulk of the Keithley Log Cabin National Historic District in Manitou Springs. They were built by her grandfather, Everard Keithley, over a span of 1919 to 1956. Keithley was supervisor of the Pike National Forest for 20 years who became a legend for his efforts to plant trees, build roads and protect the forest.

  

He became Pike superintendent in 1925,  three years after the Forest Service had moved its headquarters to Colorado Springs.  

By the time he retired in 1946, Keithley was credited with overseeing the planting of 30 million trees across the Pike. It was a massive job to reclaim the land, which had been stripped by loggers, miners, homesteaders and wildfires.  

In addition, he is credited for building the Rampart Range Road, fighting to open Gold Camp Road to the public and developing tree nurseries used to reforest mountain ranges.  

Keithley practiced what he preached. Besides building cabins on his land, he created a tree nursery and planted trees all over his land, which had been a goat pasture.  

Each cabin was named for a type of tree, such as Blue Spruce.  

In this image from GoogleEarth, the Keithley Log Cabin National Historic District can been seen. On the north end is a tree nursery planted by Everard Keithley, legendary Pike National Forest supervisor. Millions of trees were planted in the forest during his 33 years with Pike National Forest, the last 20 as supervisor. His efforts reclaimed land descimated by logging and wildfire. He also built seven cabins from 1919 to 1956 designated a historic district in 1983.

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Keithley died in 1973 and the homestead passed to his son, Joseph.  

 However, his son didn’t have the same passion for trees and the property was neglected, says his daughter, Nancy Galles Bower

Still, in 1983 the property was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.  

Joseph Keithley loved trains and built a small-gauge track around the property. He even built an exact replica of a coal-fired steam engine which he rode around the tracks.  

 By the time he died in 1999, the nursery was overgrown and most of the fruit trees on the property were gone.  

Nancy Galles Bower and her son, Doug Edmundson, stand on the porch of a cabin built by her grandfather, Everard Keithley.

 Today, Nancy Galles Bower is matriarch of the property. When Joseph died, she was able to keep 8.6 acres and six cabins.  

She and her 44-year-old son, Doug Edmundson, live in cabins on the property and they rent the other four. They also share a passion for restoring the property and preserving the legacy of Everard Keithley. 

Nancy Galles Bower looks at the coal-fired steam locomotive and tender her father, Joseph Keithley, designed and built as an exact replica of an actual train. He used to ride it around the family homestead.

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Doug Edmundson stands on the old narrow-gauge railroad tracks built by his grandfather, Joseph Keithley. He hopes to restore the train.

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One of the first cabins built by Everard Keithley, supervisor of the Pike National Forest from 1926-46. He built a group of cabins that were placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.

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This is a photo of a plaque erected on a boulder near Balanced Rock in the Garden of the Gods honoring Nancy Galles Bower's grandfather, Everard Keithley.

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The U.S. Forest Service brand is visible in the logs of the cabins.

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INDIANS RETURNING TO GARDEN OF THE GODS

September 22nd, 2010, 5:08 pm by

Indians are returning to their ancient holy land in the Garden of the Gods on Saturday for their first traditional powwow there in 32 years.

They were run out of the park in 1978 by the city after their annual cultural celebration attracted large crowds and caused trampled grass, damaged plants and noise, the city said.

Worse, the city claimed neighbors were upset at the drumming during the powwow.

The Indians, whose presence in the garden is traced back 3,400 years, were told to find a new home for their annual, day-long events.

In subsequent years, they were relegated to rodeo grounds, community centers and gymnasiums — barred from the place they consider their spiritual hub.

They’ve spent more time protesting in the Garden than celebrating their culture, dancing and praying in gratitude.

In the 1990s, Indians became upset about the commercial exploitation of the Garden. Some objected to Indians who danced for tourists. Others were upset at Indian trinkets and souvenirs sold in the park.

Then came the controversy over construction of a new visitors center.

A group of about 60 Indians returned to the park in 1997 for a World Peace Day event. They prayed. Danced. Drummed. No problem. But the powwows didn’t return.

Until now.

 On Saturday, the Colorado Springs Indian Center is sponsoring a powwow that is expected to draw a large crowd to the Rock Ledge Ranch Historic Site in the park.

It starts at 10 a.m. and ends at 5 p.m.

It will feature traditional dancers, craft vendors, fried bread.

And drums.

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NEIGHBOR WANTS TO REIN IN HORSE TRAFFIC

June 16th, 2010, 1:31 pm by

Back in the day, horses were a common sight in Colorado Springs.

This was the West, after all.

Not anymore.

Unless you live on Columbia Road. Here’s a look at it from FlashEarth.com:

Folks who live on that street on the far west edge of Colorado Springs have lived with constant horse traffic. That’s because they live between Academy Riding Stables and the Garden of the Gods.

The stables were established in 1928. Since 1934, the stables has been leading trail rides into the Garden, using Columbia as its main route.

Here, wranglers wait to lead a trial ride.

Academy Riding Stables general manager Walter Hampel, below, cinches up saddle as a trail ride heads out of the corral, onto Holly Street and up Columbia Road on the way to the Garden of the Gods.

The riders stay to the far west edge of Columbia to let cars pass.

An Academy Riding Stables wrangler brings up the rear as a trail ride leaves Columbia and heads into the Garden of the Gods.

Even folks who complain about the horses acknowledge that Hampel and his wranglers do a good job controlling their horses and cleaning up after them.

And they acknowledge that Academy tries to be a good neighbor by offering each resident of Columbia two free passes every summer for a trail ride. That’s an $86 value, at $43 per hour ride.

A wrangler in a golf cart buzzes up and down the street all day with a shovel, scooping up manure.

The horses have made so many trips up and down Columbia over the years that their hooves have worn a groove in the blacktop pavement.

Hampel said the longest string of horses allowed is 21, including three wranglers. They never ride closer than 200 yards apart. He said horses and wranglers are trained to avoid emergency vehicles.

Resident Bruce Lindsey complains  about the horses and worries they might prevent emergency vehicles from quickly reaching a victim.

But most cherish the unique quality they lend the neighborhood. They view it as a daily celebration of our Wild West heritage. They enjoy the “clomp, clomp, clomp” of the horses.

 And some suggest they make the neighborhood safer because they slow speeding drivers.

Instead of inhibiting emergency care, Hampel said his wranglers have called ambulances when they’ve noticed neighbors in distress.

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LIKE A ROLLING STONE! Life below Pikeview Quarry

September 23rd, 2009, 4:14 pm by

pikeviewscar1

  Most people look out their back windows and, beyond the fence, can see into their neighbor’s kitchen or family room or bedrooms.

 Not true for folks in Oak Valley Ranch, a neighborhood tucked in the foothills between Mountain Shadows and Peregrine on Colorado Springs‘ northwest edge.

 Especially for families living on Front Royal, Coldwater and Hollandale drives.

 They back up to Castle Concrete Co.’s  Pikeview Quarry. Above is a 2001 photo of the quarry from The Gazette’s archives.

flintstonequarry05

 We’re not talking Fred Flintstone here, either. This is the real thing, visible for miles along Interstate 25, just south of the Air Force Academy.

Lately, Oak Valley Ranch residents have had front-row seats for dramatic landslides that have sent upwards of 2 million tons of limestone cascading down the mountainside.

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 The first slide occured Dec. 2, 2008, and dumped and estimated 1.5 million tons of limestone into the pit at the base of the cliff. The slide is obvious in the photo, above, taken the same day by The Gazette’s Carol Lawrence.

 But the mountain wasn’t done rockin’ and rollin’ yet. It let loose again Sept. 13 with a blast that sounded like thunder to neighbors who ran from their homes and ate dinner on their patios, watching as boulders the size of locomotives plunged down the cliff, dropping another 250,000 tons before it was done. 

Here’s a look at the two slides.

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 Reader Chris Dorry posted on YouTube video of the slide that you can watch it on this link. At about the two minute mark, you’ll actually see landslide activity as rock breaks off and rolls. My friends at KOAA TV NewsFirst 5 also got some nice footage you can view here.

Here’s another cool video clip  that gives a great view of the landslide.

Here’s a photo of the action captured by neighbor Rob Hellem, who heard what he described as “rolling thunder” during dinner around 6 p.m. and looked out to see all heck breaking loose.

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Experts say they expect further movement in the quarry.

M.L. “Mac” Shafer is vice president of Transit Mix Aggregates, which owns Castle Concrete and the Pikeview Quarry - a complex of about 100-mineable acres on a 190-acre tract.

 Transit Mix owned the Queens Quarry above the Garden of the Gods, which operated from about 1955 to 1989 and now has been reclaimed. The company also operates the Black Canyon Quarry behind Cedar Heights. And it has a sand mine along South Academy Boulevard.

Castle Concrete bought the Pikeview in 1969. It was operated for years by Peter Kiewit and Sons, Shafer said. It’s now known as Kiewit Western Corp.

Shafer said geologists agree that more landslides will occur. He said the limestone on the surface of the mountain sits on a layer of clay attached to the decomposed granite base that makes up Pikes Peak and much of the Front Range.

A year of steady snow and rain has saturated the limestone, coupled with the freeze-thaw cycle, caused it to slide, Shafer said.

On Feb. 12, federal Mine Safety and Health Administration officials issued five citations to Transit Mix and fined the company $2,564 for safety violations in connection with the slide. Shafer said the officials accused the company of mining too much of the base of the mountain, causing it to become unstable.

Since then, the company has been limited to removing its stockpiles of crushed limestone. The mine became more of a classroom for geologists and other scientists from around the world who have come to study the landslide.

After the Sept. 13 landslide, the mine has been shut down. Most of the stockpiles are exhausted. The conveyors of the rock crushers are sunning beds for bobcats. Deer and other wildlife are the only thing moving about in the mine.

Sophisticated laser sensors watch the mountainside, measuring it every few hours for any movement. Shafer said the company is developing a plan it hopes to present next June for possibly reopening the mine and finishing reclamation efforts.

Neighbors, meanwhile, are wondering if there’s any danger in rocks rolling into their backyards. Look at these bad boys hanging from the top of the latest slide. Shafer estimates the larger boulder on the right weighs at 20,000 tons! Like a locomotive perched on the mountainside.

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Shafer said such a disaster is not likely. Below is a look at the mine, prior to the landslides, from GoogleEarth. It shows the pit.

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For now, things are calm again. But, eventually, experts expect the mine to break loose again. They are especially watching a fault at the apex of the mine above the most recent slide. On a recent hike with a geologist, Shafer said he was able to actually look into the fault and see the spot where the limestone, clay and granite meet.

For now, the landslide have not destroyed all the reclamation efforts done over the past decade on the southern rim of the mine. More than 2,000 trees have been planted on the ledges of the mine by volunteers with the Colorado Mountain Reclamation Foundation.

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READ ‘EM AND WEEP

September 13th, 2009, 11:43 am by

Budget projections. For Colorado Springs in 2010, it looks pretty bleak.

Just check out the city’s Web page. You can’t avoid the numbers or the city’s efforts to convince voters to approve a property tax increase on Nov. 3 to avoid drastic cuts. Here’s an example of the city’s efforts to educate voters on how little they pay in sales tax compared to other cities.

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Income from sales taxes and other sources is in a free-fall.  The city planned to spend about $237 million from its general fund in 2010. Now, it  is projecting a $25.4 million shortfall in revenue.

penny-culbreth-graftHere’s a link to a presentation by City Manager Penny Culbreth-Graft , left, on Aug. 24 in which she laid out the ugly numbers.

 

 

 

 

Everyone knows the greatest savings are achieved through reductions in personnel. And you are probably thinking: look, the city has 1,800 employees. How hard can it be to save $25.4 million?

Really hard if you take 1,200 employees out of the equation.

That’s how many police and firefighters are on the city payroll. Voters don’t like cuts in public safety. And politicians like to brag about all the new cops and firefighters they put  on the streets.

That leaves just 600 city staffers to shoulder the cuts. And, again, nobody likes to see their pothole fillers and snowplow drivers cut. Here’s a look at the budget pie. The big slice is police and fire. The smaller slice is every other department in city government.

budgetpiechart

So the budget ax is taking aim at so-called “non-essential” services like parks, recreation and cultural services. I guess that’s true, if you consider quality of life a “non-essential” item. Check out these numbers.

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 That agency has 216 folks work to maintain six community centers, seven pool complexes, the ice center, museum, historic sites and thousands of acres of parks from Garden of the Gods and Red Rock Canyon down to dozens of neighborhood parks.

Who needs them? I’m guessing there isn’t anyone reading this who doesn’t use one or more of the facilities on that list.

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